Serious doubts have been raised about the three supposed suicides of
prisoners at Guantanamo in June 2006. A report
from Seton Law Law School had shown that the official Naval Criminal
Investigation Service [NCIS] report supporting the suicide claim was not
credible. Harpers writer
Scott Horton reported the testimony of four tower guards on duty that
night outside the camp that contradicted the official account. Those
guards' testimony suggested, rather, that the prisoners died at another
previously unreported site, dubbed "Camp No" by the guards. [Does the
site exist? "No, it doesn't."] The guards testimony raised the prospect
that the alleged suicides were something else and were made to appear as
suicides.

Today the Seton Hall team has released a new report dissecting the
official Department of Defense responses to these previous reports. The
new report -- DOD
Contradicts DOD: An Analysis of the Response to Death in Camp Delta
-- demonstrates that the DOD responses are about as credible as the
original NCIS report, that is, not at all. Rather, the responses suggest
a frantic attempt to salvage a cover-up that can't be salvaged once it
receives scrutiny.

The authors demonstrate that the responses contradict key findings of
the original NCIS report.

DOD now asserts only one detainee had a rag in his throat
at the time of death, but the NCIS investigation shows all three had
rags in their throats.

DOD asserts that more than 100 interviews were conducted during the
first three days of the investigation; however, only 24 personnel were
interviewed on June 10 and none on June 11, 12, and 13. No more than 45
individuals were interviewed during the entire investigation.

DOD now asserts that NCIS reviewed all available video footage, and
found nothing of evidentiary value. The record shows NCIS had a
videotape of the events. Since either activity in the camp or lack of
activity would be relevant to the conflicting claims, it is implausible
that there is nothing of evidentiary value on the tape.

DOD now asserts that the detainees hanged themselves while lights
were dimmed. The Admiral concluded the detainees hanged themselves with
the lights on. The DOD does not explain this discrepancy.

Most importantly, however, the Seton Hall authors point out that all
of the military personnel statements from that nigh are missing. As
lead author Seton Hall professor Mark stated in a press
release:

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Everyone on duty that night, in addition the Alpha Block
guards, was ordered to write sworn statements as soon as the detainees
were declared dead. And every one of those statements is missing.

Writing these statements is specified by the Standard Operating
Procedures. Yet these guards were then ordered to stop writing and were
later threatened with perjury charges. After the threats they apparently
made statements supporting the Official Story.

Report coauthor Sean Camoni further pointed out the absurdity of this
disappearance of their original statements:

You tell me, why do you order all your witnesses to write
out sworn statements and then not use them?

The most obvious reason, of course, is that those statements might
contradict the Official Story.

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Read the entire report
to see how fanciful the Official Story is. As the Seton Hall authors
state:

If, three and a half years after the three men died, and
seven weeks after Seton Hall revealed the failings of the investigation,
this is the strongest response the DOD could muster, there is reason to
suspect that no good response exists. The initial investigation into
the deaths of three detainees on June 9, 2006, was flawed, the DOD's
response is flawed, and a new investigation is necessary to find out
what really happened that night.

It is important to remember what is at stake here. If these men did
not kill themselves, they were killed by others. There is evidence
suggesting that their deaths may have occurred during brutal
interrogations at Camp No. However, given three simultaneous deaths on
the same night, to my mind, intentional homicide cannot be ruled out. If
they were deliberately killed, we need to know why? And why was the
fact covered up, rather than thoroughly investigated and exposed? Was it
to cover up some secret so potentially damaging that it was worth
risking murder and cover-up?